A month ago I wrote a blog about Wade Davis’s Into The Silence - his recent book describing the British expeditions of 1921, 1922 and 1924, which developed into a sustained campaign to conquer Mt. Everest for the first time. It was the last major prize of a long period of exploration and adventure in the early decades of the twentieth century. Davis focused especially on the talented and charismatic George Mallory – considered the best British mountain climber of his generation. He was the only mountaineer of the group who participated in all three trips west across Tibet from northern India - attempting to reach the top of Everest via the immense mountain's daunting north face.
Interested
in learning more about Mallory and those expeditions of the early 1920s, I did
a search of the resources available at the Hamilton Public Library. To my
surprise, I discovered a blu-ray DVD titled The
Wildest Dream. It turns out to be a perfect companion-piece to the Davis
book – or an alternative version of the story, for those reluctant to plough
their way through the detailed history found in his 573-page book.
The Wildest Dream was directed by Anthony Geffen for
Altitude Films; it was released in 2009 by National Geographic Entertainment.
Its focus is on George Mallory’s attempts to climb Everest - and how his
life-story intersects with, and parallels, that of contemporary American
climber Conrad Anker, who found Mallory’s frozen remains on the upper slopes of
the mountain in 1999, 75 years after he died in a last desperate attempt to
reach the summit.
The film
opens with a re-enactment of Anker’s discovery of Mallory’s body. It wasn’t an
accidental discovery – Anker was part of an expedition team who were looking specifically
for Mallory’s and Irvine’s bodies (Irvine was Mallory’s climbing partner on
that day of June 8, 1924, when they went missing, trying one last
time to get to the top of Everest). Footage from 1994 shows their search of the
dead climber’s clothing. Mallory’s identity is confirmed by a name tag sewn
into a piece of his clothing. Artifacts and papers are removed from the scene
and provide some clues about their owner’s final hours alive on the mountain. Mallory
had promised his wife Ruth that he would leave a photograph of her at the
summit. That photograph was not found in any of his pockets. Also, a pair of
snow goggles were found – suggesting that the sun had gone down when the
accident occurred that killed the two climbers. If it was that late in the day,
perhaps they had been delayed getting to the summit, and were on their way
back. Furthermore, Mallory’s body was found in a position well below the Second
Step, the last difficult bit of climbing they would have faced.
Modern climbers in vintage climbing gear of the 1920s |
The first
half-hour of the film gives a good summary of Mallory’s life, up to the time he made a lecture tour of
the United States between January and March of 1923. It was during that visit
that Mallory was asked, at the end of one of his talks, why he was driven to
climb Everest. He responded famously: “Because it’s there.” This part of the
film goes into the background of his life, including his education at Cambridge
University and his experiences in the trenches during World War I. Twenty of the twenty-six climbers who took part in the 1920s expeditions were veterans of the Great War.
The next
section of the film concentrates on Conrad Anker and his decision to return to
Mt. Everest in order to attempt a free-climb of the Second Step, a tricky cliff
face at 28,300 feet that Mallory and Irvine would have had to get up and over
in order to reach the summit. Just as Mallory needed a partner during his climb
– he and Irvine would be attached to each other in the “brotherhood of the rope”
– Anker recruits young British mountaineer Leo Houlding to join him on his
adventure. Houlding was a talented young climber, but like Mallory, Irvine and
the rest of the climbers on those 1920s expeditions, he had no experience of
high-altitude climbing. But he's a good rock-climber - demonstrated by an amazing sequence that shows him climbing a rock-face without any ropes. He clambers over a couple of overhangs - suspended just by his fingertips.
During Anker’s
and Houlding’s climb of Everest they also test out modern reproductions of the
gear that Mallory and Irvine were using – clothing made from gabardine and
climbing shoes which were nothing more, really, than hob-nailed boots. They wore seven layers of clothing – just managing
to cope with conditions on the upper reaches of the mountain. The boots, however,
were completely inadequate. When Anker and Houlding don the vintage clothing
for the second time - above Camp 4 - they narrowly escape suffering frostbite.
Conrad Anker (left) and Leo Houlding (right) |
The Wildest Dream is a fascinating film for those
who are interested in mountaineering in general, or the climbing of Everest in particular.
The mix of historical detail and contemporary adventure is compelling; and the production
is top-notch. There are two narrative voices driving the documentary forward: Liam
Neeson is used predominantly to give the history of the 1920s expeditions; in
the second half of the film, Anker’s voice takes over - recounting his ascent
up the mountain, following in Mallory’s footsteps.
Ruth & George Mallory |
One of the
most effective techniques in the film is to use actors Ralph Fiennes and
Natasha Richardson to give voice to George and Ruth Mallory. And Hugh Dancy
speaks for Sandy Irvine. No captions or identifiers are needed; their
distinctive voices are immediately recognizable. Whenever they speak, we know
who it is being portrayed. And the excerpts we hear - especially those from the
regular letters back-and-forth between Mallory and his wife - recreate the
drama of those times brilliantly, and, as Mallory’s fate moves inexorably
closer, they become very moving.
The Wildest Dream is a blu-ray production. The modern
footage of Everest and the land seen on the long approach to the mountain is
stunning. Some computer-generated sequences are amazing – such as the footage
showing the long ascent up the main Rongbuk Glacier, the parallel East Rongbuk
Glacier, and the steep cliff of snow and ice leading up to the North Col. The
views looking north, down and away from the Second Step, are breath-taking.
The film is
also full of excellent black-and-white photographs taken during the expeditions
of the 1920s. More importantly, there are many sequences showing film shot
during 1922 and 1924 by British cinematographer John Noel (taken from the
National Archives of the British Film Institute), who would use his footage
later to produce a couple of documentaries about the British exploration of
Tibet and the attempts to climb Mt. Everest. So we see lots of images – still photographs
and very old film footage – that help us to imagine the type of person George
Mallory was.
The director
adds several dramatic reconstructions of Mallory and Irvine’s final climb –
including an impressive sequence that shows the probable course of the accident
that led to their demise. Seeing the actors on the slopes of the mountain in
their period clothing makes you marvel at the ability of those early climbers
to deal with the incredibly harsh conditions faced at those high altitudes –
not just the extreme weather, but also the debilitating lack of oxygen.
Conrad Anker and Leo Houlding wearing vintage gabardine climbing clothes and hob-nailed boots |
Eight years
after finding the body of George Mallory 800 feet from the summit of Everest,
the circle is complete. Anker and Houlding have retraced the intended path of Mallory
and Irvine to the top of the world. “I know you can achieve your wildest dream,”
Ruth wrote to Mallory about his obsessive drive to be the first man to conquer
Everest. This fascinating film gives a riveting account of the struggle, and goes
a long way to showing what kind of special people they are who are willing to risk
their lives doing the same.